When Malik Yakini describes the bumper crop of organic tomatoes, kale,
and salad greens that he and his team harvested this year at D-Town
Farm, a seven-acre site in a public park in Detroit and the largest
endeavor of the DBCFSN, he isn’t simply taking pride in the produce.
“The work that we’re doing is not just about food,” Yakini emphasizes.
“We’re planting seeds of consciousness at the same time that we’re
planting seeds that will grow into fruits and vegetables.”

For this lifelong social justice activist, transforming consciousness
means promoting self-sufficiency and building a sense of community
empowerment—all within the context of “traditional African cultures and
our own historical legacy of resistance to oppression.” To this end,
DBCFSN also runs the Ujamaa Food Co-op, a monthly buying club for
obtaining groceries at below-retail prices, set to open as a full-service retail store within the next two years.

Yakini founded DBCFSN in 2006 to counter a food system that has reduced
his city to what has been termed a “food desert.” Many Detroiters live
nowhere near a supermarket but must obtain “what could really only
nominally be called food,” he explains, from fringe food locations like
gas stations or party stores. “Since we’re faced with a lack of fresh,
healthy produce in Detroit, we thought growing our own food is one way
of addressing that. We see ourselves as creating a model that we hope
will inspire other people in the city,” says Yakini.

In the former automotive center of the world, 20 to 30 percent of
residential lots are now vacant, as thousands of unsafe buildings have
been demolished by the city. But rising from that rubble is a major
urban agriculture movement, with Yakini as one of the significant
players.

He’s also inspired by Growing Power founder and CEO Will Allen, who, in
turn, admires Yakini for “his commitment to improve the lives of all the
citizens of Detroit.” Says the 2011 JBF Leadership Award recipient,
“Malik Yakini is truly one of the strongest community leaders in the
country because he is unafraid to tell the truth.”

Yakini acknowledges that improving Detroit’s food security involves more
than creating access. It also requires a cultural shift away from the
emotional attachment to unhealthy food—which DBCFSN addresses with a
public education campaign that includes the “What’s for Dinner?” lecture
series and the Food Warriors Youth Development Program, which teaches
youth about problems with the current food system and the virtues of sustainable agriculture.

DBCFSN also fosters a localized food system at an advocacy level: it’s
the lead organization in writing the city of Detroit’s Food Security
policy and in the 2009 creation of the Detroit Food Policy Council,
which Yakini chaired until this spring.

Clearly Yakini is not slowed down by complacency. “I can’t really stop
and pat myself on the back, because the majority of people in the city
of Detroit are still impacted by food insecurity and food injustice.”

About the James Beard Foundation Leadership Awards
The 2012 JBF Leadership Awards recognize visionaries from a broad range
of backgrounds, including government, nonprofit, and literary arts, who
are working toward creating a healthier, safer, and more sustainable
food world. This year’s honorees were chosen by an advisory board
comprised of a dozen experts from diverse areas of expertise, as well as
last year’s Leadership Award recipients. Now in its second year, the
Leadership Awards recognize specific outstanding initiatives as well as
bodies of work and lifetime achievement. Winners will be honored at a dinner ceremony that will take place during the James Beard Foundation Food Conference on October 17 in New York City. For more information, visit jbfleadershipawards.org.